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Thursday, April 3, 2025

Faith defends use of expletives: Strong language meant to push for change

by

Elizabeth Gonzales
33 days ago
20250301
THA Secretary of Health, Wellness and Social Protection Dr Faith Brebnor

THA Secretary of Health, Wellness and Social Protection Dr Faith Brebnor

Sec­re­tary of Health, Well­ness, and So­cial Pro­tec­tion, Dr Faith Breb­nor has de­fend­ed her use of ex­ple­tives dur­ing a re­cent meet­ing with em­ploy­ees at the Pub­lic Health Ser­vices De­part­ment in Sig­nal Hill. 

Speak­ing in a ple­nary sit­ting on Thurs­day, Breb­nor ex­plained that the strong lan­guage was meant to make the point clear and push for re­al change in ad­dress­ing pro­duc­tiv­i­ty chal­lenges with­in the de­part­ment.

The meet­ing, which was part of dis­cus­sions on im­prov­ing work­ing con­di­tions at Sig­nal Hill, fo­cused on the com­mence­ment of three key planned projects.

While some em­ploy­ees crit­i­cised the lan­guage, Breb­nor stood by her ac­tions, say­ing that the use of ex­ple­tives was in­tend­ed to high­light the se­ri­ous­ness of the is­sues at hand. She said she clear­ly stat­ed that the con­ver­sa­tion could be un­fil­tered giv­ing work­ers the green light to be open and di­rect in rais­ing con­cerns.

She said one of the dri­vers com­plained of not hav­ing boots on be­cause the wrong ones were pro­cured due to an er­ror caused by the ex­ist­ing pro­cure­ment laws. She ad­mit­ted that’s when she used the ex­ple­tives. 

She ex­plained, “Now, we spent the mon­ey. Which means for us to buy boots for him again we have to get the mon­ey and yes I did say ‘I have to pull it out of meh (ass)’ be­cause we have to find mon­ey again af­ter we went through the process.”

Al­though the men ac­cused her of curs­ing sev­er­al times, she did not ad­mit to any oth­er in­stance.

Since the in­ci­dent on Tues­day, Chief Sec­re­tary Far­ley Au­gus­tine has launched an in­ves­ti­ga­tion ask­ing for the work­ers to come to him di­rect­ly.

“Dis­gust­ing, ap­palling, and bor­der­line in­sult­ing” were some of the words the work­ers used to de­scribe the in­ter­ac­tion.

The work­ers claimed the sec­re­tary used the “F” word to the trans­port fore­man and then asked them when is­sues sur­round­ing over­time were raised if they want­ed her to “pull it out my ass.”

How­ev­er, the trans­port fore­man at the cen­tre of the ver­bal abuse said his col­leagues blew the in­ci­dent out of pro­por­tion since he saw no rea­son for them to stand up for him as he didn’t feel dis­re­spect­ed by the ex­ple­tives used.

The mo­tion on pro­duc­tiv­i­ty was brought by Com­mu­ni­ty De­vel­op­ment and Sport As­sis­tant Sec­re­tary Wayne Clarke.

Dur­ing his con­tri­bu­tion, he blamed the lack of fund­ing for the To­ba­go House of As­sem­bly and the poor work eth­ic among some work­ers as the ma­jor rea­sons for the is­land’s low pro­duc­tiv­i­ty. 

He ex­plained that with­out enough re­sources, the THA strug­gles to run im­por­tant pro­grammes. Clarke al­so men­tioned that while some work­ers are hard­work­ing, oth­ers have poor work ethics, which af­fects progress.

In re­sponse, THA Mi­nor­i­ty Leader Kelvon Mor­ris ar­gued that nei­ther work­ers nor fund­ing was the prob­lem. He point­ed to poor man­age­ment of hu­man and fi­nan­cial re­sources as the re­al is­sue, say­ing this mis­man­age­ment is what sti­fles pro­duc­tiv­i­ty on the is­land.

Mor­ris said, “While I be­lieve there is mer­it to look­ing at pro­duc­tiv­i­ty across the THA and all in­sti­tu­tions, I do not agree with the di­ag­no­sis that the prob­lem is the work­ers. My prog­no­sis to this is­sue is that we have in­com­pe­tent dri­vers who are un­wor­thy of the li­cence they were giv­en.”

Iron­i­cal­ly, as the de­bate on pro­duc­tiv­i­ty con­tin­ued, the pre­sid­ing of­fi­cer had to briefly sus­pend the sit­ting due to a lack of quo­rum— an or­der which states that a sit­ting can­not hap­pen if less than nine as­sem­bly­men are present in the cham­ber.

It re­sumed min­utes lat­er af­ter mem­bers re­turned to the cham­ber.


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